|
Post by richardburton on Nov 11, 2010 12:23:19 GMT 1
Doh!
|
|
|
Post by Lonesome Crow on Nov 12, 2010 0:00:14 GMT 1
So that's what the Cancan is, I always thought it was a dance
|
|
|
Post by richardburton on Nov 12, 2010 11:18:43 GMT 1
Thank you he's hear all week!
|
|
|
Post by Relyt on Nov 20, 2010 22:36:49 GMT 1
What is this I don't even.
|
|
|
Post by Lonesome Crow on Nov 21, 2010 13:12:30 GMT 1
The Bunny that fell to Earth! Poor Bunny.
|
|
|
Post by richardburton on Nov 22, 2010 11:12:42 GMT 1
He's landed in quite a remote location - I hope they can get emergency services to him in time!
|
|
|
Post by poyks on Nov 24, 2010 22:24:35 GMT 1
Is it made of blancmange?
|
|
|
Post by Commandingtripod on Nov 25, 2010 3:13:30 GMT 1
|
|
|
Post by Relyt on Nov 25, 2010 17:42:56 GMT 1
Wrong month for that. Halloween is still another 11 months.
|
|
|
Post by Lonesome Crow on Nov 25, 2010 23:34:18 GMT 1
Is it made of blancmange? Not all pink things are blancmange Poyks. ;D
|
|
|
Post by Relyt on Nov 27, 2010 5:52:51 GMT 1
Everything is blancmange if you don't know what blancmange is. Which I obviously do. Yes. Obviously. Maybe. Guess not.
|
|
|
Post by Lonesome Crow on Nov 27, 2010 13:27:41 GMT 1
;D Hehe! probably an English thing, It's like a jelly ( American translation jell-o) but made with milk. You'll probably rename it (Jell-o-milk-o) or something like that. ;D
|
|
|
Post by Relyt on Nov 29, 2010 2:02:18 GMT 1
I'll probably rename it as "a nasty," I can't stand Jell-o.
It still strikes me as odd that, although Britons and Americans speak English, there's still a great deal of translations between the two groups. Maybe during the Continental Congress sessions before the Revolution, instead of discussing the coming war the Founding Fathers were thinking of ways to form a language exclusive to the 13 colonies in order to be independent in another way. But then they got bored and decided that we would just omit "u's" in words like colour, the second floor of a building would become the floor just 10-15 feet above the ground, and the nation's youth and feline citizens in the 21st century would use numb3rs 1nst34d 0f v0w3ls.
I feel I must add that I do not use '1337 5p34k' because I'm still an adult, albeit a young one, and I'm also at least half-positive that I'm not a cat.
|
|
|
Post by richardburton on Nov 29, 2010 17:18:25 GMT 1
I'll probably rename it as "a nasty," I can't stand Jell-o. It still strikes me as odd that, although Britons and Americans speak English, there's still a great deal of translations between the two groups. Maybe during the Continental Congress sessions before the Revolution, instead of discussing the coming war the Founding Fathers were thinking of ways to form a language exclusive to the 13 colonies in order to be independent in another way. But then they got bored and decided that we would just omit "u's" in words like colour, the second floor of a building would become the floor just 10-15 feet above the ground, and the nation's youth and feline citizens in the 21st century would use numb3rs 1nst34d 0f v0w3ls. I feel I must add that I do not use '1337 5p34k' because I'm still an adult, albeit a young one, and I'm also at least half-positive that I'm not a cat. Nearly modified your post instead of quoting it! Oops! Half positive...that could also be interpreted as 50% chance of actually being a cat. That's pretty good odds even for non-gamblers...
|
|
|
Post by Lonesome Crow on Nov 29, 2010 20:58:52 GMT 1
"Two Nations divided by a common language" Whoever said that and I've heard it attributed to Winston Churchill, George Bernard Shaw, Oscar Wilde and even Mark Twain, but whoever it was, was spot on. ;D
|
|